Samuel Backer
Contact
I am a historian of American culture and capitalism, with a focus on the long 20th century. I also work extensively on digital and computational approaches to history鈥攂ig data, podcasts, 鈥渃omputational close reading,鈥 and more. I received my PhD from Johns Hopkins University.
My current research focuses on the origins of the American entertainment industry in the era prior to mechanically reproducible performances鈥攖he records, films, and radio we typically think of as integral to the development of mass culture. By tracking how the nation鈥檚 entertainment industry thrived in a period prior to these technologically-mediated forms, it is possible to shed new light onto why American culture developed like it did, while also providing a useful point of comparison for contemporary developments.
To explore these more recent forms of musical history, I cohost 鈥淢oney 4 Nothing,鈥 a podcast that analyzes the intersections between music and capitalism.
Broadly, I am interested in cultural history, the history of capitalism, music/theater history, and histories of race.
I run the DiSH (Digital and Spatial Humanities) lab. I am eagerly working to bring together students and scholars interested in the digital/computational humanities at the University of 海角社区.
Public Scholarship
鈥淚t鈥檚 Buzzing Under the Surface鈥 鈥 Interviewed by Jan Blaszczak, Dwutygodnic, Spring 2024.
鈥淲hat the Neil Young-Joe Rogan dust-up tells us about the music industry,鈥 Washington Post, February 2022.
鈥淪treamlining the Streaming Regime鈥 鈥 The Baffler, January 2021.
鈥淚rving Berlin in Chinatown鈥 鈥 Gotham: A Blog for Scholars of New York City History, September 2020.
鈥淧roducers and the Beat of New Orleans Bounce,鈥 鈥 Red Bull Music Academy, 2018.
鈥淕rime and the City鈥 鈥 Jacobin Magazine, 2018.
鈥淪hake It Fo Yah Hood: Bounce, New Orleans Hip Hop鈥 (Radio Documentary) 鈥 Afropop Worldwide /PRI, 2017.
Areas of Expertise
Digital/Public History
History of Capitalism
U.S. History

